The Chimney Corner
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Leído por LibriVox Volunteers





Stowe wrote over 30 books. This one is a fascinating collection of her post Civil War musings on a variety of cultural topics, staged mostly as conversations between Christopher Crowfield (Stowe's masculine nome de plume), and his wife, their son Ben, daughter Jenny, their friends, and various neighbors who drop in to chat around the fireside. Lively topics include women's suffrage & their education, entertainment, fashion, the economy during reconstruction, youth entertainment, and how society and its institutions should prepare young women for useful, meaningful lives besides getting married or simply depending on other family members to support them while they do little or nothing, or worse, fall into a street life. She reflects on the economic after-effects of the Civil War, and the struggle to create a more civilized nation. ( ~ Michele Fry) (7 hr 51 min)
Capítulos
Ch.1 What will you do with her? or The Woman Question | 37:55 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch.2.1 Woman's Sphere | 24:59 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch. 2.2 Woman's Sphere | 26:31 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch. 3.1 A Family-Talk on Reconstruction | 25:02 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch 3.2 A family-Talk on Reconstruction | 30:54 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch.4 Is Woman a Worker? | 34:25 | Leído por susanjhudson |
Ch.5 The Transition | 26:53 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch. 6 Boily Religion: A Sermon on Good Health | 34:21 | Leído por weezer |
Ch. 7 How Shall we Entertain our Company? | 31:01 | Leído por Michele Fry |
Ch.8 How Shall we be Amused? | 27:40 | Leído por William Allan Jones |
Ch.9 Dress, or who makes the Fashions | 46:47 | Leído por Kathleen Moore |
Ch.10 What are the sources of Beauty in Dress | 39:36 | Leído por Kathleen Moore |
Ch.11 The Cathedral | 32:29 | Leído por William Allan Jones |
Ch.12 The New Year | 32:09 | Leído por William Allan Jones |
Ch.13 The Noble Army of Martyrs | 21:13 | Leído por KevinS |
Reseñas
women’s Occupations





Michele Fry
As one of the readers on this book, I can say it was quite interesting a discussion of women’s occupations. We’ve come a long way, but the problems remain largely the same. Stowe did a marvelous job writing about all the psychological snafus between the classes.